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My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage Novel Cover

My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage

The camera flashes were violent, a strobe-light assault that turned the red carpet into a disjointed stop-motion film. I smiled until my cheeks ached, the muscle memory of a Manhattan socialite taking over. My hand rested on the crook of Ian Edwards’ arm, feeling the expensive wool of his tuxedo, but no heat beneath it. To the world, we were the apex: the tech titan and the heiress, a union of staggering net worth and photogenic perfection. "Look this way, Mrs. Edwards! Ian, over here!" I leaned into him, tilting my head just so. For a second, the pressure of his side against mine felt real. Then the heavy door of the limousine slammed shut, sealing us inside a vacuum of leather and tinted glass. Ian peeled himself away from me instantly, shifting to the far side of the bench seat as if my touch were corrosive.
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Chapter 5

The scream tore from my throat before I could stop it. I scrambled through the rusted door, my heels skidding on the wet concrete, the smell of copper and rain choking me. Ian whipped around, his chest heaving, cradling his left hand against his ribs. Blood dripped steadily from his fingers, pattering onto the dirty floor like a grotesque metronome.

"You're sick," I gasped, the air burning my lungs. "You love her. You're not protecting a sister, Ian. You're protecting a lover."

He didn't look ashamed. He looked feral. The mask of the CEO was gone, replaced by something ancient and terrified. He stepped over the candles, the shadows stretching long and distorted against the corrugated walls.

"Go home, Blaire."

"She killed your mother!" I shouted, my voice cracking. "And you're here, breaking your own bones to pay for her sins? Is that it? You think if you bleed enough, it washes her hands clean?"

He closed the distance between us in two strides. His good hand shot out, slamming against the wall beside my head, trapping me. The scent of him—sweat, rain, and the metallic tang of fresh blood—was overwhelming. His eyes were voids, devoid of the warmth I had spent a year begging for.

"You understand nothing," he hissed, his face inches from mine. "You think you matter in this equation? You are a prop, Blaire. A beautiful, expensive distraction to keep the world looking at you instead of her."

"I'm your wife," I whispered, though the word felt like ash in my mouth.

"You are a shield," he corrected, his voice dropping to a terrifying, hollow calm. "And shields don't ask questions. They take the blows."

Panic flared, hot and bright. I tried to duck under his arm, to run back to the safety of the rain, but he caught my wrist. His grip was iron. He didn't let go.

***

The ride back to the penthouse was a blur of motion and silence. He dragged me through the foyer, past the doorman who averted his eyes, and into the elevator. When the doors slid open to our apartment, he didn't stop. He pulled me into the master bedroom, the space where I had spent so many nights waiting for him.

"Ian, stop," I pleaded, trying to wrench my arm free. "You're bleeding. You need a doctor."

"I need to remember what I am," he growled.

He threw me onto the bed. The mattress absorbed the shock, but the emotional impact shattered me. He loomed over me, unbuckling his belt with his good hand, his mangled one hanging uselessly at his side, dripping onto the pristine duvet.

This wasn't desire. There was no heat in his gaze, only a desperate, frantic need to assert control over a world spiraling out of his grasp. He kissed me, but it was a collision, hard and bruising. He was using my body to anchor himself, to prove that his marriage was real, that he wasn't the monster in the warehouse.

I stopped fighting. I went limp, staring up at the ceiling, tracing the shadows of the chandelier. It was a brutal, loveless act—a weaponized intimacy designed to silence me, to remind me that I belonged to him, and that my will was secondary to his penance. When he finished, he rolled off me without a word, staring at the ceiling, his breathing ragged. I lay there, feeling less like a woman and more like a discarded glass doll, cracked and empty.

***

The next morning, I didn't cry. The tears had evaporated, leaving behind a hard, crystalline hatred. I dressed in a soft beige cardigan and skipped makeup, letting the dark circles under my eyes tell a story of defeat. I pinned a vintage emerald brooch to my lapel—a heavy, intricate piece from the 1920s.

I found Arielle in the solarium of the Edwards estate, painting watercolors. The sunlight streamed in, illuminating her delicate features. She looked angelic, the perfect picture of innocence.

"Blaire," she said, not looking up from her canvas. "You look terrible."

I walked over and sank into the wicker chair opposite her, keeping my posture slumped. "You win, Arielle."

She paused, her brush hovering over a splash of blue. She turned to me, a slow, predatory smile spreading across her lips. "I beg your pardon?"

"He chose you," I said, my voice trembling with feigned resignation. "Last night... he made it very clear. I'm just the smoke screen. He loves you. He's always loved you."

Arielle laughed, a light, tinkling sound that made my skin crawl. She set down her brush and leaned back, basking in my admission. "I told you, didn't I? You were never really in the game."

"But the accident..." I pressed, leaning forward, wringing my hands. "His mother. How can he live with that? Knowing what happened?"

Arielle’s eyes flashed with a dark, triumphant pride. She lowered her voice, not out of fear, but intimacy. "Because he knows it was necessary. She was going to send me away, Blaire. She was going to ruin us. When I pushed her... when I watched her fall... I did it for us. And Ian knows that. That's why he covers for me. That's why he'll never let you go."

My heart hammered against my ribs, loud enough that I feared she might hear it. I reached up, my fingers brushing the cool metal of the emerald brooch.

"He really would do anything for you," I whispered.

"Everything," she corrected, picking up her tea. "Now run along, Blaire. I'm busy."

I stood up, my knees shaking, and walked out of the solarium. Once I was around the corner, out of sight, I pulled the brooch from my sweater. My thumb grazed the tiny switch on the back. The red recording light blinked once, then went dark.

I had the monster. Now, I just needed to sharpen the stake.

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